- A group of artists have covered a suburban Melbourne house entirely in mirrors
- The artwork is meant to 'explore the 'Great Australian Dream of homeownership'
- Inside the house is a gallery featuring installations exploring the theme of 'home'
- 'Untitled House' is the feature artwork for the City of Knox Immerse Arts Festival
By Yael Brender For Daily Mail Australia
Published: 23:22 EST, 10 November 2017 | Updated: 23:22 EST, 10 November 2017
Three Swinburne University art students have used a suburban Melbourne house to literally hold a mirror up to what a 'house' and 'home' means to the community.
Artist Roh Singh, who called the house his 'latest and greatest work', worked for months to cover every inch of the home in mirrors – exactly 1,836 pieces of it tailored to fit the existing brickwork.
Working with Larry Parkinson and Morganna Magee, the trio have also converted the entire indoor area into a series of art galleries containing multiple installations.
'Through covering the house's exterior with a mirrored surface brick by brick, we hope to echo a sense of this disappearing, bringing a symbolic impression of the house being lost,' Singh said.

Three artists from Swinburne University in Melbourne have tiled an entire house with mirrors


From left: Roh Singh, Morganna Magee and Larry Parkinson are responsible for the artwork


'Untitled House' is a multidisciplinary work of art that explores the 'Great Australian Dream'


Photographer Rhiannon Slatter said that the art explored the challenges of home-ownership
The now-finished 'Untitled House' is a multidisciplinary artwork that explores ways that the 'Great Australian Dream of home-ownership is being challenged in contemporary Australian life'.
'This drab suburban house [has become] a multidisciplinary artwork incorporating installations to explore what a ‘house’ and ‘home’ mean to the community,' said photographer Rhiannon Slatter, who photographed the house's stunning transformation.


Before: What was once a regular suburban home in Melbourne is now a mirrored work of art


It took days for the three artists to transform the regular home into a huge outdoor work of art


A workman stands on the roof to apply tiles to the brick chimney of the Ferntree Gully house


The facade of the regular suburban house gradually disappears under a cover of 1,836 mirrors
![After: 'This drab suburban house [has become] a multidisciplinary artwork with installations'](https://madridjournals.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/4638636A00000578-5071779-image-a-10_1510361473351.jpg)
![After: 'This drab suburban house [has become] a multidisciplinary artwork with installations'](https://madridjournals.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/4638636A00000578-5071779-image-a-10_1510361473351.jpg)
After: 'This drab suburban house [has become] a multidisciplinary artwork with installations'
Singh explained that with the issues around housing affordability becoming a real threat, the experience of home ownership is 'becoming an ephemeral idea, one that many are watching slip from the horizon'.
'The concept of the tangible disappearing out of sight and out of reach is one of the central intentions of the House project,' he said.
'It is the shift in this social change, our aspirations and the elusiveness of attaining this dream now and for the future that is symbolised through a mirror cladding of the facade.'


Larry Parkinson (left) and Roh Singh (right) show one of 1,836 pieces of mirror used in the work


The interior of the house is a multi-room gallery featuring interconnected artistic installations


The experience of home ownership is 'becoming an ephemeral idea,' said artist Roh Singh


'Untitled House' launched as the feature artwork for the City of Knox Immersive Arts Festival
After months of hard work, the artists transformed the interior suburban house too, into a gallery featuring interconnected installations to explore the concept of 'home'.
'Untitled House' launched on Saturday 11th November as the feature artwork for the City of Knox Immersive Arts Festival.
It is open to the public Wednesdays and Saturdays on November 15, 18, 22, 25 & 29. December 2, 6 & 9.
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